Good self-control has also been shown to be a key component of grit — perseverance in the face of educational challenges. It’s no wonder, then, that colleges have placed great emphasis on teaching students better self-control.
Contents contributed and discussions participated by garth nichols
Student/Parent Tutorials - Google Drive - 0 views
A New Way to Become More Open-Minded - 0 views
We're Teaching Grit the Wrong Way - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 1 views
-
-
But the strategies that educators are recommending to build that self-control — a reliance on willpower and executive function to suppress emotions and desires for immediate pleasures — are precisely the wrong ones. Besides having a poor long-term success rate in general, the effectiveness of willpower drops precipitously when people are feeling tired, anxious, or stressed. And, unfortunately, that is exactly how many of today’s students often find themselves.
-
Efforts to emphasize willpower and executive function to achieve self-control are largely ineffective in helping those students.
- ...5 more annotations...
What The Screen Time Experts Do With Their Own Kids | MindShift | KQED News - 2 views
-
They unplug at family dinner and before bed. They have a family movie night on Fridays, which is an example of the principle Radesky touts in her research, of “joint media engagement,” or simply sharing screen time.
-
But more than just limiting time, says Radesky, “I try to help my older son be aware of the way he reacts to video games or how to interpret information we find online.” For example, she tries to explain how he is being manipulated by games that ask him to make purchases while playing.
-
She sums up her findings from over a decade of research: “As kids and adults watch or use screens, with light shining in their eyes and close to their face, bedtime gets delayed. It takes longer to fall asleep, sleep quality is reduced and total sleep time is decreased.”
- ...3 more annotations...
Building Staff Culture: The Importance of Gratitude - The Wejr Board - 1 views
-
Some days I saw all of this; most days, however, I was looking through “deficit-coloured glasses” and o
-
nly saw the fact that I was teaching more than ever (as we were short teachers-on-call to replace
-
could not get done at work nor in the evening as we had an amazing new little family member), I was en
- ...12 more annotations...
The Good Project - 0 views
Discomfort, Growth, and Innovation | Edutopia - 0 views
-
We’ve all heard the calls for innovation ringing through the education field. This age of exponential change leaves us no choice—we must change or our students will fall behind.
-
about 16 percent of any group actively pursue change
-
So how do we encourage the rest of our colleagues toward this cycle of innovation? It comes down to one simple thing: School leaders and coaches must foster a culture that celebrates the discomfort inevitably resulting from change. And that requires three key strategies.
- ...1 more annotation...
Clearing the Confusion between Technology Rich and Innovative Poor: Six Questions - 2 views
Problem or opportunity? Depends on how you look at things. - The Principal of Change - 5 views
-
You cannot simply swap out the word, “problem” with “opportunity”; your thinking has to shift that way. For example, a subtle change in the question, “When am I going to have time to do this?”, to, “How would I work this into my day in a meaningful way?”, changes the way we frame what is in front of us. One question is looking for ways things won’t work, and the other is trying to find a way.
-
A subtle change in language, can change how we move forward, and how we tackle the challenges embrace the opportunities in front of us.
Math Teachers Should Encourage Their Students to Count Using Their Fingers in Class - T... - 2 views
-
This is not an isolated event—schools across the country regularly ban finger use in classrooms or communicate to students that they are babyish. This is despite a compelling and rather surprising branch of neuroscience that shows the importance of an area of our brain that “sees” fingers, well beyond the time and age that people use their fingers to count.
-
Remarkably, brain researchers know that we “see” a representation of our fingers in our brains, even when we do not use fingers in a calculation
-
Evidence from both behavioral and neuroscience studies shows that when people receive training on ways to perceive and represent their own fingers, they get better at doing so, which leads to higher mathematics achievement. The tasks we have developed for use in schools and homes (see below) are based on the training programs researchers use to improve finger-perception quality.
- ...4 more annotations...